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For a chuckle: Canadian says she will ‘welcome’ Trump refugees, but not the thousands of Syrian Muslims

Posted by Ann Corcoran on March 5, 2016

I’m surprised the LA Timeseven published this woman’s remarks when asked how she felt about all those Americans who say they will move to Canada if Donald Trump is elected president.

Here is Elaine….

They think if they say it over and over again it will be true!

Elaine Munro, 62, is a retail customer service clerk in Almonte, just outside Ottawa.

“I would rather have a bunch of Americans than all of these Muslims [the Canadian government is] bringing in,” she said. “I am totally against that. They’re taking jobs that Canadians have. The [Canadian] government is setting them up better than how Canadians are being looked after. Healthcare is being overrun by [Syrian refugees].”

Readers here know that boy Trudeau promised Canada would take 25,000 Syrians within a few months of his election as prime minister and sure enough he has (much to the consternation of Canadians like Elaine).

Thousands are living in hotels (on the taxpayers’ dime) throughout Canada as the country doesn’t have an adequate supply of housing especially for large families.

Trudeau will be “on the hot seat” in a 60 Minutes interview to be aired Sunday evening, for more click here.

Dr. Rich Swiersaid

> Ann Corcoran posted: “I’m surprised the LA Times even published this > woman’s remarks when asked how she felt about all those Americans who say > they will move to Canada if Donald Trump is elected president. Here is > Elaine…. Elaine Munro, 62, is a retail customer servi” >

The “Building a New Life in Australia” project is a longitudinal study into the way “humanitarian migrants” (i.e. refugees) have settled into Australia.
September 13, 2015 MORE than 90 per cent of surveyed refugees granted permanent visas under the previous Labor government had failed to find a job within three to six months, forcing the majority to rely on government welfare to survive, a new report has revealed.

Almost half reported they had never had a job in their lives, and 15 per cent had never attended school in their birth country. Almost 40 per cent reported not understanding or speaking English, with only 10 per cent having a university degree and just 6 per cent being qualified for a trade. Only 7.8 per cent had qualifications recognised in Australia.

As a result, only 6 per cent of all those followed in the Building a New Life in Australia (BNLA) report, to be released today by the Department of Social Services, had found a job.

The main source of income for 88 per cent of the refugees at the time of reporting was government payments.